|
Search Results: All Fields similar to 'Astronaut' and Who equal to 'Michael Foale'
|
Printer Friendly |
NASA Space Day in Mississipp
Astronaut Michael Foale (cen
1/30/08
Description |
Astronaut Michael Foale (center) and Stennis Space Center officials met with Mississippi Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant (at rear podium) and Gulf Coast delegation members in Mississippi Senate chambers during NASA Space Day in Mississippi activities at the Capitol on January 30. |
Date |
1/30/08 |
|
NASA Space Day in Mississipp
Astronaut Michael Foale (cen
1/30/08
Description |
Astronaut Michael Foale (center) and Stennis Space Center officials met with Mississippi House of Representatives Gulf Coast delegation, including Speaker William "Billy" McCoy (far right), during NASA Space Day in Mississippi on January 30. |
Date |
1/30/08 |
|
NASA Destination Tomorrow -
Third segment of episode 17
6/1/03
Description |
Third segment of episode 17 that contains the How it Works segment in which Astronaut Michael Foale describes what eating in space is like. |
Date |
6/1/03 |
|
NASA Destination Tomorrow -
NASA Destination Tomorrow vi
6/1/03
Description |
NASA Destination Tomorrow video containing three segments as described below. NASA Destination Tomorrow Future Space Food Concerns segment desribes the problems with long duration space travel such as bone loss, food stability, food nutrition and the need for astronauts to have alternative food sources once they reach their destination. The Future Space Food Concerns segment ends with a Did You Know? segment about astronaut ice cream. NASA Destination Tomorrow Food Tech in Long Space Trip segment contains the Behind the Scenes segment that describes the technology and goals for food on space missions. The Food Tech in Long Space Trip segment describes how food is stored, and the challenges of providing food in space. The Food Tech in Long Space Trip segment next describes the processing and preparing of food on the planet Mars. The Food Tech in Long Space Tripsegment also discusses some of the issues with food like food preparation time, food preparation tools, weight of food, weight of food processing machines, what nutrition astronauts will need to maintain healthy bodies and the effects of radiation on food. The Food Tech in Long Space Trip segment ends with a Did You Know? segment describing the first time solid food was eaten in space. NASA Destination Tomorrow Eating In Space segment contains the How it Works segment in which Astronaut Michael Foale describes what eating in space is like. This video is part two of a two part series discussing Food Technology and how it is used by NASA. |
Date |
6/1/03 |
|
STS-84 Landing
Title |
STS-84 Landing |
Full Description |
Framed by the Vehicle Assembly Building in the distance, at left, and the Mate- Demate Device, the Space Shuttle Atlantis with its drag chute deployed touches down on KSC's Runway 33 at the conclusion of STS-84 mission. The Shuttle Training Aircraft piloted by Astronaut Kenneth D. Cockrell, acting deputy chief of the Astronaut Office, is flying in front of Atlantis. Main gear touchdown was at 9:27:44 a.m. EDT on May 24, 1997. The first landing opportunity was waved off because of low cloud cover. It was the 37th landing at KSC since the Shuttle program began in 1981, and the eighth consecutive landing at KSC. STS-84 was the sixth of nine planned dockings of the Space Shuttle with the Russian Space Station Mir. Atlantis was docked with the Mir for five days. STS-84 Mission Specialist C. Michael Foale replaced astronaut and Mir 23 crew member Jerry M. Linenger, who has been on the Russian Space Station since January 15. Linenger returned to Earth on Atlantis with the rest of the STS-84 crew, Mission Commander Charles J. Precourt, Pilot Eileen Marie Collins, and Mission Specialists Carlos I. Noriega, Edward Tsang Lu, Elena V. Kondakova of the Russian Space Agency and Jean-Francois Clervoy of the European Space Agency. Foale is scheduled to remain on the Mir for approximately four months, until he is replaced by STS-86 crew member Wendy B. Lawrence in September. Besides the docking and crew exchange, STS-84 included the transfer of more than 7,300 pounds of water, logistics and science experiments and hardware to and from the Mir. Scientific experiments conducted during the STS-84 mission, and scheduled for Foale's stay on the Mir, are in the fields of advanced technology, Earth Sciences, fundamental biology, human life sciences, International Space Station risk mitigation, microgravity sciences and space sciences. |
Date |
5/24/1997 |
NASA Center |
Kennedy Space Center |
|
Official portrait of 1987 as
Title |
Official portrait of 1987 astronaut candidate C. Michael Foale |
Description |
Official portrait of 1987 astronaut candidate C. Michael Foale. Foale, Ph.D. and a member of Astronaut Class 12, wears a navy blue flight suit and holds a space shuttle orbiter model. |
Date |
10.15.1987 |
|
STS-86 Landing
Title |
STS-86 Landing |
Full Description |
The orbiter drag chute deploys after the Space Shuttle orbiter Atlantis lands on runway 15 of the Kennedy Space Center Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) at the conclusion of the nearly 11-day STS-86 mission. Main gear touchdown was at 5:55:09 p.m. EDT, October 6, 1997, with an unofficial mission-elapsed time of 10 days, 19 hours, 20 minutes and 50 seconds. The first two Kennedy Space Center landing opportunities on Sunday were waved off because of weather concerns. The 87th Space Shuttle mission was the 40th landing of the Shuttle at Kennedy Space Center. On Sunday evening, the Space Shuttle program reached a milestone: The total flight time of the Shuttle passed the two-year mark. STS-86 was the seventh of nine planned dockings of the Space Shuttle with the Russian Space Station Mir. STS-86 Mission Specialist David A. Wolf replaced NASA astronaut and Mir crew member C. Michael Foale, who has been on Mir since mid-May. Foale returned to Earth on Atlantis with the remainder of the STS-86 crew. The other crew members are Commander James D. Wetherbee, Pilot Michael J. Bloomfield, and Mission Specialists Wendy B. Lawrence, Scott E. Parazynski, Vladimir Georgievich Titov of the Russian Space Agency, and Jean-Loup J.M. Chretien of the French Space Agency, CNES. Wolf is scheduled to remain on the Mir until the STS-89 Shuttle mission in January. Besides the docking and crew exchange, STS-86 included the transfer of more than 3.5 tons of science/logistical equipment and supplies betweent the two orbiting spacecraft. Parazynski and Titov also conducted a spacewalk while Atlantis and the Mir were docked. |
Date |
10/6/1997 |
NASA Center |
Kennedy Space Center |
|
Official portrait of 1987 as
Title |
Official portrait of 1987 astronaut candidate C. Michael Foale |
Description |
Official portrait of 1987 astronaut candidate C. Michael Foale. Foale, Ph.D. and a member of Astronaut Class 12, wears a navy blue flight suit and holds a space shuttle orbiter model. |
Date Taken |
1987-10-15 |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
Astronaut C. Michael Foale i
Title |
Astronaut C. Michael Foale is briefed on use of Sky Genie |
Description |
Astronaut C. Michael Foale, STS-63 mission specialist, is briefed on the use of Sky Genie device by Karin L. Porter. The device would aid in emergency egress operations aboard a troubled Space Shuttle. Porter, an employee of Rockwell International, helps train astronauts in egress procedures at JSC's Shuttle mockup and integration laboratory. |
Date Taken |
1994-09-20 |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
General Description |
International Space Station Imagery |
|
|